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US MARKET INSIGHT WEBINAR SERIES NACAC: State of College Admission Tuesday, 25 August 2015 11:00 12:00 EDT (16:00 17:00 GMT) Technical support: [email protected] Questions for presenters: [email protected] [email protected]

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Page 1: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

US MARKET INSIGHT WEBINAR SERIES NACAC: State of College Admission

Tuesday, 25 August 2015

11:00 – 12:00 EDT (16:00 – 17:00 GMT)

Technical support:

[email protected]

Questions for presenters:

[email protected]

[email protected]

Page 2: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

2

Agenda

- Introductions

- Key findings – State of College Admission

- Methodology

- High school graduation and college enrollment

- Admission strategies

- Factors in the Admission decision

- School counselors and college counseling

- Transfer students

- International education

- US university case study – George Mason University

- Discussion/Q&A

Page 3: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

3

In-session features

a) Attendee List

b) Grab Tab

c) Audio Setup

d) Questions Pane

e) Type questions here

f) Webinar details

Page 4: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

4

British Council SIEM USA contacts

TAMSIN THOMAS

Higher Education Manager

STEPHANIE BLOCHINGER

Education Officer

Postgraduate recruitment, alumni engagement, Study

abroad & exchange

CHELSEA BRYAN

Education Coordinator

Postgraduate recruitment, Alumni engagement, Study

abroad & exchange

JENNA HARTSELL

Education Coordinator

Undergraduate recruitment

QU TING ZHENG

Education Coordinator

Conference engagement, market intelligence

[email protected]

Page 5: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

5

Education UK Roadshow

(Undergraduate)

Direct marketing services

NAFSA Review 2015 CASE

Europe Conference

Creative Industries

(Postgraduate)

2015 NACAC National

Conference

Page 6: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

6

Undergraduate Autumn 2015 and beyond

- Autumn 2015 tour

- Chicago: 24-26 September

- NACAC conference: 1-3 October

- Mid-Atlantic: 25-30 October

- New York & New England: 1 – 5 November

- Education UK Counselor Missions (dates TBA)

- Webinars for US counseling professionals

- Guiding your students through undergraduate admissions to

Medicine in the UK – 17 September

Page 7: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

7

Our presenters

National Association for College Admission Counseling

Lindsay Addington

Assistant Director of International Initiatives

Melissa Clinedinst

Associate Director of Research

University speaker: George Mason University (VA)

David Burge

Vice President for Enrollment Management

Page 8: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

State of College Admission 2014 Report

Page 9: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Data Sources

• NACAC Annual Surveys – Counseling Trends Survey

– Admission Trends Survey

• External Data – US Department of Education IPEDS Data

– US Census Bureau

– Other Education Organizations

Page 10: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

2013 Admission Trends Survey – Surveyed 1,241 NACAC member colleges

• NACAC member colleges represent 66% of all accredited, 4-yr, nonprofit, Title-IV participating colleges in the US that grant bachelors degrees

– Received 352 responses (28% response rate) – Survey respondents larger, on average, compared to all colleges;

public survey respondents had slightly lower acceptance rates 2013 Counseling Trends Survey

– Surveyed NACAC member secondary schools plus random sample of all public high schools (10,000 total)

– 729 usable responses – Survey respondents over-representative of private schools; under-

representative of schools with higher proportions of low-income students

Methodology

Page 11: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

High School Graduation and College Enrollment

Page 12: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Number of High School Graduates: Actual and Projected

1,500

2,000

2,500

3,000

3,500

4,000

19

75

-76

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77

-78

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Nu

mb

er o

f st

ud

ents

(th

ou

san

ds)

Note: Includes both public and private high school graduates. Source: US Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. (2013). Digest of Education Statistics. (Table 210.10).

Peak 3.45 million in 2011-12

Page 13: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Actual and Projected Numbers of Public High School Graduates, by Region: 1999–00, 2009–10 and 2023–24

(in thousands)

SOURCE: US Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. (2013). Digest of Education Statistics. (Table 219.20).

454

648

861

591 557

727

1,105

740

501

674

1,212

778

-

200

400

600

800

1,000

1,200

1,400

Northeast Midwest South West

1999-00(actual)

2009-10(actual)

2023-24(projected)

Page 14: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

College Enrollment Rates of Recent High School Completers, by Gender: 1972 to 2012

SOURCE: Digest of Education Statistics. (2013). U.S. Department of Education, Washington, DC: National Center for Education Statistics. (Table 302.10).

35.0

40.0

45.0

50.0

55.0

60.0

65.0

70.0

75.0

19

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Co

llege

En

rollm

ent

rate

(%

)

October of each year

Males Females

NOTE: Enrollment in college as of October each year for individuals ages 16 to 24 who completed high school during the preceding 12 months. High school completers include both diploma and GED recipients.

Page 15: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Applications to College

Page 16: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Percentage of Students Submitting Three or More and Seven or More Applications: 1990 to 2013

SOURCE: Higher Education Research Institute, UCLA. Annual The American Freshman reports.

61 60 62 63 62 61 62 61 63 64 67 67 67 70 68 71 71 71 74 75 77 79 77 81

9 8 9 9 10 10 11 11 11 12 13 14 14 16 16 17 18 19 22 23 25

29 28 32

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Per

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den

ts

Submitted three or more applications Submitted seven or more applications

Page 17: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Percentage of Colleges Reporting Change from the Previous Year in Number of Applications for Fall Admission: 1996 to 2013

SOURCE: NACAC Admission Trends Survey, 1996 - 2013.

53

67 64

73 74 71

74 76

67 73 75 78 75

65

73

64 64 65

32

25 19

16 17 19 18 16

23 20 18 20 18

29

19

26 27 26

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11 9 10 8 8 10 7 7 3

7 7 8 10 9 9 0

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Per

cen

tage

of

colle

ges

Number of applicationsincreased

Number of applicationsdecreased

Number of applicationsstayed the same

Page 18: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Trends in Average Acceptance Rate at Four-Year Colleges

69.6

71.4 70.7

71.4

69.8

67.9 68.1

66.5 66.5 66.0

67.1

68.7

69.7 69.0

68.2

67.2 66.3 66.5

65.8

63.7 63.7 63.0 62.8

63.2

58.0

60.0

62.0

64.0

66.0

68.0

70.0

72.0

74.0

2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

Public Private

Note: The list of colleges was drawn from the 2002-2013 Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) using the online IPEDS Data Center. For each year of data, institutions were selected using the following criteria: US location, four-year, not-for-profit, baccalaureate degree-granting, and Title-IV participating. Institutions that indicated having open admission policies were then excluded. Source: Integrated Postsecondary Education System (IPEDS) online Data Center. (2011-12). US Department of Education, Washington DC: National Center for Education Statistics.

Page 19: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Trends in Average Yield Rate at Four-Year Colleges

51.4 50.6

49.1 48.9

47.5 48.4

46.2

42.9 42.9 42.6 41.3

39.7

47.8

45.7 45.5 44.2 43.8 44.2

43.3

38.4 38.4

36.4 35.4

34.3

30.0

35.0

40.0

45.0

50.0

55.0

2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

Public Private

Note: The list of colleges was drawn from the 2002-2013 Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) using the online IPEDS Data Center. For each year of data, institutions were selected using the following criteria: US location, four-year, not-for-profit, baccalaureate degree-granting, and Title-IV participating. Institutions that indicated having open admission policies were then excluded. Source: Integrated Postsecondary Education System (IPEDS) online Data Center. (2011-12). US Department of Education, Washington DC: National Center for Education Statistics.

Page 20: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Admission Strategies

Page 21: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Percentage of Colleges Using Early Admission

Strategies and Wait Lists: Fall 2013

Early Decision

Early Action Wait List

Total 18.3% 32.4% 42.6%

Control

Public 8.9 26.7 35.6

Private 22.9 35.1 45.8

SOURCE: NACAC Admission Trends Survey, 2013.

Page 22: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Percentage of Colleges Reporting Increases in Early Applications

43

37

58 63

49 49 47

38

55 50

56

68

56

80

70

81

65

74 72

62

69

78

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2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

Early Decision Early Action

SOURCE: NACAC Admission Trends Survey, 2013.

Page 23: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Mean

Mean percentage of all applications received at ED colleges through Early Decision

8.1%

Mean percentage of Early Decision applications accepted (ED selectivity rate)

64.0

Mean overall selectivity rate for institutions with Early Decision

53.2

Mean percentage of admitted ED students who enrolled (ED yield rate)

86.6

Mean overall yield rate at ED colleges 31.6

Key Statistics for Early Decision Colleges: Fall 2013

SOURCE: NACAC Admission Trends Survey, 2013.

Page 24: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

SOURCE: NACAC Admission Trends Survey, 2013.

Mean

Mean percentage of all applications received at EA colleges through Early Action

42.4%

Mean percentage of Early Action applications accepted (EA selectivity rate)

66.7

Mean overall selectivity rate for institutions with Early Action

65.0

Mean percentage of admitted EA students who enrolled (EA yield rate)

29.1

Mean overall yield rate at EA colleges 27.9

Key Statistics for Early Action Colleges: Fall 2013

Page 25: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Mean Percentage of Students Admitted off the Wait List: Fall 2013

Mean Percent Admitted

Total 30.5%

Control

Public 35.2

Private 28.9

Selectivity

Accept fewer than 50% of applicants 16.3

50 to 70% 34.5

71 to 85% 46.2

More than 85% --

-- Category included only one institution. NOTE: Figures in italics should be interpreted with caution due to low sample size (fewer than 15 institutions per cell). SOURCE: NACAC Admission Trends Survey, 2013.

Page 26: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Factors in the Admission Decision

Page 27: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Factor

Considerable importance

Moderate importance

Limited importance

No importance

Grades in college prep courses 81.5% 10.4% 7.4% 0.7%

Strength of curriculum 63.7 24.8 8.1 3.3

Admission test scores (SAT, ACT) 58.3 29.5 10.0 2.2

Grades in all courses 51.5 37.4 8.9 2.2

Essay or writing sample 22.2 37.8 22.6 17.4

Student’s demonstrated interest 20.1 34.0 23.9 22.0

Counselor recommendation 15.9 43.9 24.7 15.5

Teacher recommendation 15.2 35.3 33.5 16.0

Class rank 14.1 43.9 28.3 13.8

Extracurricular activities 9.6 40.6 33.9 15.9

Interview 7.8 21.2 27.9 43.1

Portfolio 7.5 30.6 32.5 29.5

Subject test scores (AP, IB) 6.4 9.4 34.3 49.8

SAT II scores 6.0 10.9 23.7 59.4

State graduation exam scores 3.4 10.1 28.4 58.2

Work 2.6 17.1 51.3 29.0

Percentage of Colleges Attributing Different Levels of Importance to Factors in the Admission Decision: 2013

SOURCE: NACAC Admission Trends Survey, 2013.

Page 28: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Factors Showing Most Change in “Considerable Importance” Rating: 1993 to 2013

SOURCE: NACAC Admission Trends Survey, 2013.

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Demonstrated Interest

Essay

Class rank

Admission test scores

Grades in all courses

Page 29: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Differences Among Institutions in Admission Factor Rating

Public vs. Private

Private: Essay/writing sample, interview, counselor and teacher

recommendations, extracurricular activities, portfolios, and

demonstrated interest

Enrollment Size

Smaller: Interview, counselor and teacher recommendations,

demonstrated interest, portfolios, and state graduation exam

scores

Selectivity

More Selective: Similar criteria to private and smaller institutions,

in addition to strength of curriculum, work, subject test scores (AP

and IB) and SAT II scores

SOURCE: NACAC Admission Trends Survey, 2013.

Page 30: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

School Counselors and College Counseling

Page 31: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Students Per Counselor at Public Schools

SOURCES: Common Core of Data. Elementary/Secondary Information System (ELSi) tableGenerator. (2011-12) US Department of Education, Washington, DC: National Center for Education Statistics. NACAC Counseling Trends Survey, 2013. .

• In 2011-12, each public school counselor responsible for 475 students, on average

• Five states with ratios higher than 700 students per counselor: AZ, CA, MN, MI, UT

• Counseling Trends Survey data indicate that ratios are higher at public schools

Page 32: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Percentage of Time on College Counseling

Private Schools

52.2

13.2

13.3

9.2

[VALUE].8

4.8 [VALUE].5

Public Schools

23.5

23.5

[VALUE]

14.7

6.5

4.4 [VALUE].5

Collegecounseling

High schoolcourses

Personal needs

Testing

Job counseling

Teaching

SOURCE: NACAC Counseling Trends Survey, 2013.

Page 33: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Transfer Students

Page 34: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Freshman Apps per Transfer App

Freshman Admits per Transfer Admit

Total 11.6 14.1

Public 5.3 5.4

Private 14.8 18.3

Mean Freshman to Transfer Ratios at Four-Year Colleges: 2012-13

Source: NACAC Admission Trends Survey, 2013

Page 35: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Transfer Acceptance

Rate

Freshman Acceptance

Rate

Transfer Yield Freshman Yield

Total 62.6 64.7 54.4 32.7

Public 67.7 66.2 61.1 37.2

Private 60.0 64.1 51.3 30.7

Source: NACAC Admission Trends Survey, 2013

Comparison of Freshman and Transfer Admission Statistics at Four-Year Colleges: 2012-13

Page 36: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

More Important Stay the Same Less Important

Total 57.9% 40.5% 1.6%

Public 67.1 31.7 1.2

Private 53.5 44.7 1.8

Four-Year Colleges’ Expectations About Importance of Transfer Recruitment Over Next 3 Years

Source: NACAC Admission Trends Survey, 2013

Page 37: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Mean Percentage of Newly Enrolled Transfer Students at Four-Year Colleges who Transferred from a Two-Year Institution: 2012-13

Mean

Total 53.2%

Control

Public 66.0

Private 48.3

Total Enrollment

Fewer than 3,000 students 48.2

3,000 to 9,999 56.4

10,000 or more 64.4

Transfer Selectivity

Accept fewer than 50 percent of applicants 43.8

50 to 70 percent 53.3

71 to 85 percent 64.9

More than 85 percent 56.7

SOURCE: NACAC Admission Trends Survey, 2013.

Page 38: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Transfer Student Recruitment Strategies: 2013

45.2

57.9

67.5

80.2

[VALUE]

96.8

0 20 40 60 80 100 120

Lead generation

Tailored campus visit programs or visit days

Recruitment events at community colleges

Partnerships with community colleges

College fairs

Information on website

SOURCE: NACAC Admission Trends Survey, 2013.

Page 39: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

International Education

Page 40: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

• US is top host country of internationally mobile students at the secondary and tertiary levels.

• More US citizens pursuing full undergraduate degrees abroad.

• Admission officers need to become more globally-focused and knowledgeable to advance in the profession(NACAC Career Paths); same is true for college counselors

US College Counseling and Admission in a Global Context

Page 41: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

• In 2013, 48,632 international students were enrolled for a full diploma

International Students at US High Schools

Top countries of origin: • China (32.3%) • South Korea (12%) • Germany (9.8%) • Mexico (3.6%) • Brazil (3.1%)

Top host states: • California (17.6%) • New York (7.8%) • Florida (7.6%) • Massachusetts (7.2%) • Pennsylvania (6.3%)

• Majority (95%) of international students attend private institutions, though efforts increasing at public schools

• Agency-based recruitment was the most prevalent method of recruitment among schools that actively recruit.

Page 42: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

376

368

296

290

285

274 235

0

1000

2000

3000

4000

5000

6000

7000

8000

9000

Chicago Ft. Lauderdale Minnesota Batlimore Seattle Indiannapolis Baton Rouge

NACAC College Fairs – Fall 2014

Domestic International

International Students at NACAC College Fairs

Page 43: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

• Counselors underprepared to work with this growing population • 79% of US counselors felt either “slightly” or “not at all” prepared to

advise international students on financial aid opportunities.

• 69% of US counselors felt either “slightly” or “not at all” prepared to advise international students on taking an English proficiency exam.

• US high schools becoming a source of international

applicants • Are domestic recruiters trained to work with international students?

• How are students being perceived? Evaluated?

Impact on Counseling and Admission

Page 44: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

• In 2013-14, 370,724 international students were pursuing UG degrees.

• Majority (65%) of international students attend public institutions, and in 2013-14 70% of students attended just 200 US institutions.

• Agency-based recruitment is occurring at approximately 20% of US institutions

Top countries of origin [UG]: • China (29.8%) • South Korea (9.98%) • Saudi Arabia (7.25%) • Canada (3.75%) • India (3.42%)

Top host states [UG & Grad]: • California (13.73%) • New York (11.2%) • Texas (7.3%) • Massachusetts (5.8%) • Illinois (4.8% percent)

International Students at US Universities

Page 45: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

• Retention – campus readiness

• Integration/Engagement

• Budget/Revenue

• Capacity/Displacement

Impact on US Universities

Page 46: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

• In 2011-12, 46,500 US students were pursuing degrees abroad; 42% at UG level.

• Top desination countries [UG]: • UK • Canada • New Zealand • France • China • Australia

• Humanities and social sciences were the most popular disciplines studied

US Students Pursuing Degrees Abroad

Page 47: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

• Counselors underprepared to work with this growing population • 79% of US counselors felt either “slightly” or “not at all”

prepared to provide information on pursuing degrees abroad.

• 91% of US counselors felt either “slightly” or “not at all” prepared to assist US students with using federal financial aid to attend university abroad.

• Source of competition and collaboration for US institutions.

Impact on Counseling and Admission

Page 48: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

• Pathway programs and conditional admission •Government-sponsored outbound mobility

programs • English-medium degree programs in non-

Anglophone countries • Increased capacity in-country •Other countries’ student recruitment efforts

Trends to Watch

Page 49: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

University speaker:

David Burge

Vice President for Enrollment

Management

Page 50: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

Questions?

Page 51: US Market Insight Webinar Series, NACAC

51

Save the date! DATE &TIME DESCRIPTION

Tuesday, 29 September 2015

College Board

Tuesday, 20 October 2015

Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) briefing

Tuesday, 24 November 2015

Discussion: the use of agents in the US

Tuesday, 26 January 2016

Best practices: working with third party providers

Tuesday, 23 February 2016 Postgraduate market briefing

Tuesday, 29 March 2016

NAFSA conference and SAE policy discussion

For more details: www.siem.britishcouncil.org & [email protected]